Low-Power Radio vs. High-Powered Lobbyists Act now to save rca' last chance for local radio. I he National Association of Broadcasters spends over $5 million a year lobbying and hands out more than $1,000 a day to federal candidates. So when it decided to squelch an FCC plan that lets schools, churches, and civic groups serve neighborhoods with low-power FM stations, unsur- prisingly, it won the vote in the House. The New York Times called the vote "regrettable." The Washington Post said it was "a bad idea." The Los Angeles Times rushed to defend the FCC, which "works for the American people, not just powerful Washington lobbyists..." The broadcast lobbyists want to keep broadcasting in the hands of a few corporations. Which means that all radio, once the most diverse and local of mediums, sounds the same everywhere. They also want to weaken the FCC and win final say on how America's airwaves, a priceless public resource, are allocated in the future. This gives big broadcasters even more power and profits than they had before. 6 6 0 But democracy doesn't mean that the richest, loudest voice wins. Not every time. Not this time. Low-power radio can still be saved by the Senate. And it will be, if your Senators learn that you've joined thousands of ----- .-n-rn --- - - g- --- urn em ur ur urn - rn = - President Clinton _Senator The White HouseII U.SSenate OfficeBuilding aWashington D.C. 20502 Washington, D.C. 20510 You've opposed any bill that prevents the public from The House voted to weaken the FCC and kill Low- reserving some small part of the airwaves to serve the Power Radio. I urge you to defeat S. 2068 when it public good. Senate Bill 2068 - no matter how it's comes up in the Senate. Do we really want to amended - spells the end for truly local, non-commercial concentrate all media power in the hands of a few radio. Don't let it past your desk. Please use your veto. corporations? Democracy will be stronger if these truly local, non-commercial stations go on air. I~ WIN - -I~iT L___ mm____ __owmmmawe_____.-m___amonno_=0_amamMWW"_Owam U other Americans to support truly local, non-commercial radio on a human scale. Mail the coupons below immediately. You can get your Senators' e-mail addresses at lcweb.loc.gov/global/ legislative/email.html. to =0o a am w n a =0nnW"a m VM M: Representative U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, D.C. 20515 The broadcast lobby rushed their low power radio ban through the House before the thousands of community, religious, labor and educational supporters of noncom- mercial low power radio could respond. If there is anoth- er vote on the low power radio ban (House-Senate conference bill - S. 2068), please vote NO! We can't allow the NAB to kill noncommercial community radio and monopolize the nation's airwaves. IIAEnDDES IYI___EZ Low-power FM radio Is supported by: American Library Association / Communications Workers of America (AFL-CIO) / Department for Communication of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America / Federal Communications Commission Local State Government Advisory Committee / Leadership Conference on Civil Rights / League of United Latin American Citizens / Low Power Radio Coalition / Media Access Project / NAACP / National Bar Association / National Council of La Raza / National Council of the Churches of Christ, Communication Commission / National Hispanic Foundation for the Arts / National League of Cities / Rainbow-PUSH Coalition / U.S. Public Interest Research Group / United Church of Christ, Office of Communication, Inc. / United Methodist Church General Board of Global Ministries/ United States Catholic Conference Jointly funded by Public Media Center and Media Access Project (www.mediaaccess.org), 0